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The politics of water: a Southern African example
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2003This report examines the political contradictions embedded in water reform processes across different levels in Zimbabwe, South Africa and Mozambique. It argues that implementing ideas on water reform often borrowed from extremely different contexts is not an automatic and unproblematic process, but involves complex local political negotiation.DocumentPrivate sector participation in water supply: too fast, too soon?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002Is water privatisation being over-promoted? Is private sector participation (PSP) in its current forms likely to promote the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals to provide the poor with reliable, affordable and sustainable, safe drinking water? How do members of poor communities affected by the process judge PSP?DocumentThe crisis of land distribution in Southern Africa
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002Those who led southern African states to independence promised to redress the inequalities of settler colonialism by returning the land to the people. A generation later the rural poor are still waiting. Many lack access and full rights to agricultural land and, as developments in Zimbabwe and South Africa show, they are getting angry. Where did post-independence land reform policy go wrong?DocumentA comparative analysis of the financing of HIV/AIDS programmes in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland and Zimbabwe
Human Sciences Research Council, South Africa, 2003This comparative study assesses the readiness and ability of six African countries - Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland and Zimbabwe - to respond to the HIV/AIDS epidemic.DocumentSurmounting challenges: procurement of antiretroviral medicines in low- and middle-income countries
Access to Essential Medicines Campaign, MSF, 2003As the price of antiretrovirals (ARVs) in low- and middle-income countries has fallen in recent years, governments, international agencies and non-governmental organisations have been able to start developing treatment programmes for people living with HIV/AIDS (PLWHA).DocumentReview and analysis of specific Transboundary Natural Resource Management initiatives in the Southern African Region
World Conservation Union Regional Office for Southern Africa, 2001The authors of this paper intend to help clarify understanding of trans-boundary natural resource management (TBNRM) in southern Africa.DocumentThe politics of land reform in Southern Africa
Sustainable Livelihoods in Southern Africa, 2003This paper examines the politics of land in Southern Africa and, in particular, current process of land reform in Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe.DocumentTransboundary conservation: the politics of ecological integrity in the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park
Sustainable Livelihoods in Southern Africa, 2003Recent years have witnessed the emergence of an ostensibly surprising coalition of interests around the notion of Transboundary Natural Resource Management (TBNRM) in Southern Africa.DocumentDecentralisations in practice in Southern Africa
Sustainable Livelihoods in Southern Africa, 2003Different forms of decentralisation are occurring in parallel, and often in ways that cause confusion, ambiguity, high transaction costs and conflict, in southern Africa.These case studies in Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe show how: political authorities with downward accountability to electorates co-exist and sometimes conflict with decentralised service delivery (through line mDocumentRights talk and rights practice: challenges for Southern Africa
Sustainable Livelihoods in Southern Africa, 2003This research in Mozambique, South Africa and Zimbabwe looks at the practice of rights claiming on the ground, in the context of 'legal pluralism' and complex, politicised institutional settings. In the southern African context rights are formulated and claimed in a very unlevel playing field and are highly contested.Pages
